
With two days to go until Election Day, it appears that Vice President may be pulling away from the twice impeached, convicted felon, adjudicated rapist and fascist Donald Trump in most current polling. Trump is telling women “He will protect them whether they want it or not,” and that “Hispanics are warm people, sometimes too warm.” Meanwhile, Trump (78) continues rambling incoherent sentences whenever he speaks.
So, with just two days until the November 5th election, where do we stand?
In national polling, the latest ABC News/Ipsos Poll, conducted between 30 October to 01 November 2024 of 2267 “likely voters,” has the election lining up like this:
Harris 49%
Trump 46%
According to the Morning Consult Poll, conducted between 29-31 October 2024 of 8,919 “likely voters:”
Harris 49%
Trump 47%
In the Emerson Poll, conducted from 30 October to 02 November 2024 of 1,000 “likely voters,” has the race in a dead heat.
Harris 49%
Trump 49%
The NBC News Poll, conducted from 30 October to 02 November 2024 of 1,000 “likely voters” has the race deadlocked
Harris 49%
Trump 49%
Running election simulations (Courtesy of 270 to Win), Harris beats Trump 14 out of 25 times, or 56% of the time.
Harris 223/Trump 315
Harris 210/Trump 328
Harris 255/Trump 283
Harris 284/Trump 254
Harris 180/Trump 358
Harris 349/Trump 189
Harris 414/Trump 124
Harris 325/Trump 213
Harris 226/Trump 312
Harris 197/Trump 341
Harris 292/Trump 246
Harris 287/Trump 251
Harris 320/Trump 218
Harris 241/Trump 297
Harris 308/Trump 230
Harris 366/Trump 172
Harris 308/Trump 230
Harris 287/Trump 251
Harris 281/Trump 257
Harris 303/Trump 235
Harris 221/Trump 317
Harris 265/Trump 273
Harris 302/Trump 236
Harris 309/Trump 229
As far as the national race for the White House is concerned, according to recent state polling data available, if the election was today, odds are that Vice President Harris would be the 47th President of the United States, while Trump, who forever remains the only twice-impeached convicted felon, adjudicated rapist and fascist former president in U.S. history, will go down as having lost two elections in a row.
